In a couple of hours, the educational part of the event begins with a keynote presentation from USPTO Director Andrei Iancu. That will be followed by a debate on the motion "This house believes that despite recent negative developments, the United States remains and will continue to be the driving force of the global patent market". That is quite a way to open!

We keep the momentum going after the coffeee break with another keynote - this time from GE's chief innovation officer Sue Siegel - before the morning's plenaries end with a group of corporate IP heads being grilled on how they would react to a series of scenarios in which decisions taken could spell opportunity or disaster.

There will be a full report on events on this site once the day has finioshed and, of course, we will be Tweeting regularly from the @iam_magazine feed using hashtag #IPBCGlobal.

In the meantime, here are a few IPBC Global data points for you.

650+ delegates - making this a Sold Out event.

42% of attendees come from IP-owning companies.

23% of attendees are from service providers.

18% of attendees are from law and attorney firms.

9% of attendees are from finance/investment/brokerages.

8% of attendees are from government agencies, patent and trademark offices, and academic institutions.

The countries with most representation are, in order: the US, the UK, Germany, Canada, Japan, China, South Korea, Australia, France and Finland.